1222891-33-9Relevant articles and documents
Identification of inhibitors of NOD1-induced nuclear factor-κB activation
Khan, Pasha M.,Correa, Ricardo G.,Divlianska, Daniela B.,Peddibhotla, Satyamaheshwar,Sessions, E. Hampton,Magnuson, Gavin,Brown, Brock,Suyama, Eigo,Yuan, Hongbin,Mangravita-Novo, Arianna,Vicchiarelli, Michael,Su, Ying,Vasile, Stefan,Smith, Layton H.,Diaz, Paul W.,Reed, John C.,Roth, Gregory P.
supporting information; experimental part, p. 780 - 785 (2011/12/02)
NOD1 (nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 1) protein is a member of the NLR (NACHT and leucine rich repeat domain containing proteins) protein family, which plays a key role in innate immunity as a sensor of specific microbial components derived from bacterial peptidoglycans and induction of inflammatory responses. Mutations in NOD proteins have been associated with various inflammatory diseases that affect NF-κB (nuclear factor κB) activity, a major signaling pathway involved in apoptosis, inflammation, and immune response. A luciferase-based reporter gene assay was utilized in a high-throughput screening program conducted under the NIH-sponsored Molecular Libraries Probe Production Center Network program to identify the active scaffolds. Herein, we report the chemical synthesis, structure-activity relationship studies, downstream counterscreens, secondary assay data, and pharmacological profiling of the 2-aminobenzimidazole lead (compound 1c, ML130) as a potent and selective inhibitor of NOD1-induced NF-κB activation.